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Commentary: Paris, Los Angeles won bids to host the Olympics, but what’s the prize?

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Commentary: Paris, Los Angeles won bids to host the Olympics, but what’s the prize?

The benefits of hosting the Olympics are slim, a reason why fewer cities are putting in bids, says John Rennie Short.

Volunteers pose in front of the Olympics Rings on the Trocadero Esplanade near the Eiffel Tower in Paris, after the International Olympic Committee named Paris host city of the 2024 Summer Olympic Games. (Photo: AFP/Christophe Simon)

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BALTIMORE, MARYLAND: It’s official. We now have hosts for the next two Summer Olympics. Paris will host in 2024 and Los Angeles in 2028.

It looks like a victory for the International Olympic Committee (IOC), as the result could be two Olympic Games without the embarrassments of empty seats and foul water of Rio, the massive cost overruns of Sochi or the awkward political moments of Beijing.

But the announcement also marks a failure: Only two cities competed for the 2024 Summer Olympic Games – Paris and Los Angeles – and two for the 2022 Winter Olympic Games – Beijing and Almaty, Kazakhstan. This narrowing of cities willing to host is another sign that the games are in crisis.

THE BUSINESS OF THE OLYMPICS

The IOC holds the franchise for the Olympic Games, which it then rents out to host cities. The IOC prefers the current model of competition between bid cities for the simple reason that it reinforces its own power and bargaining ability.

The IOC retains control over the games, pockets the revenues from broadcasting rights and corporate sponsorship but is neither responsible for hosting and paying for the games nor at risk if any losses occur. It provides less than 13 percent of the direct cost of the games.

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In short: It’s a very sweet deal for the IOC. Not so sweet for host cities who have to pay for the Olympic Games.

The Olympic Games cost a great deal of money, and cost overruns are endemic. The tight deadline for putting on the games can easily lead to price gouging, sweetheart deals, corruption and things simply costing much more than they need to be. And security costs are mounting.

In one of the most comprehensive analyses, economists Robert Baade and Victor Matheson in 2016 looked at costs and benefits associated with hosting the Olympic Games.

The torch is lit at the Los Angeles Coliseum on September 13, 2017 in Los Angeles, California, as the city was officially named as host of the 2028 Summer Olympics. (Photo: AFP/Frederic J Brown)

On the expenditure side, they included general infrastructure, specific sports infrastructure and operational costs of hosting the games.

Benefits include tourist spending during the games, the “Olympic legacy” that might include improvements in infrastructure and increased trade, foreign investment or tourism over the long run after the games; and intangible benefits such as the feel-good effect or civic pride.

However, they conclude that the Olympics are a money-losing proposition for host cities since they result in positive net benefits only under very specific and unusual circumstances. Their main finding is reinforced by many subsequent studies.

One study, for example, found that hosting the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games led to a real consumption loss of AU$2.1 billion (US$1.7 billion) for the Australian economy.

While hosting the games may increase exports through increased trade, the same effect is found for cities that bid but did not win. One study found it is not necessary to win the bid; the bid itself sends a message to investors that the city is open for international business.

The Spice Girls perform during the closing ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in 2012. (Photo: REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth)

BIGGEST WINNERS

Who actually makes out better when a city hosts the Olympics?

Winning the bid to host the Olympics has the clearest benefit, albeit intangible, to the political regimes and economic elites running a city, as they have the opportunity to reshape the city’s image in a time of increased global competition.

Financially, the very biggest winners are of course the construction and land development companies who do very well from the contracts associated with the direct investment in sports venues and accommodation and the indirect investments of infrastructural provision.

But there are costs to city spending on the Olympics. Hosting the games crowds out other investments, especially those related to social welfare, and often displaces low-income residents and raises rents and property prices.

The games are a classic example of the privatisation of benefits and the socialisation of costs. The main benefits, such as spending on real estate development and construction, are captured by the rich and the well-connected.

The Sochi Autodrom is a part-street circuit built around the Olympic Park that hosted the 2014 Olympic Winter Games, by the Black Sea. (Photo: AFP/Yuri Kadobnov)

In my view, we need to replace the notion of a city winning the games with the image of the games capturing a city.

This type of capture takes four main forms in which resources are devoted by the host city. First, there is infrastructure capture, where the city’s infrastructure is constructed and reconstructed around the particular needs of an unusual two-week event.

Second, there is financial capture, in which public monies are devoted to funding the games, directly and indirectly. There are associated opportunity costs as other projects are canceled or much reduced in order to put on the games and social programmes are sacrificed.

Third, there is legal capture, as new legislation is introduced. Limitations are placed on citizens’ rights in order to ensure the financial profitability and the security of the games.

A number of studies point to the increased surveillance and security control measures during the games. One study of Sydney found that specifically formulated legislation for the 2000 games that significantly broadened police powers remained as a lasting Olympic Games legacy.

Fourth, there is political capture, as the normal rules of accountability and transparency are displaced and eroded by non-elected organisations such as the IOC.

Men work outside a tunnel in March 2015, which is part of the freeway under construction for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes

MANY CITIES OPTING OUT

Perhaps as a result of all of this, there is growing resistance from communities in bid and host cities. The 2022 Winter Olympic Games had only two bids – from Beijing and Almaty, Kazakhstan – after Stockholm, Krakow and Oslo withdrew their bids because of lack of public support.

Bidding for the 2024 Summer Olympic Games saw significant defections as well. In 2015, the mayor of Toronto decided not to even put the city’s name forward as an applicant city to host the 2024 games even although the Canadian Olympic Committee supported the bid.

Boston, Hamburg and Budapest all turned their backs on the opportunity to host, and gave hope and advice to bid resisters all across the globe.

There were only two serious bids for the 2024 Summer Olympic Games – Paris and Los Angeles – after the mayor of Rome, Virginia Raggi, publicly announced that the Eternal City did not want to be considered as a host city either.

Some argue, as I have, for a permanent site for the Summer Olympic Games and a limited rotation of host sites for the Winter Olympic Games to reduce its environmental impact. Others argue for a decentralising to multiple sites.

In the meantime, though, it looks like the IOC needs Los Angeles and Paris to host summer games more than either city needs the IOC to give them the right to host the games.

The reputation of both cities is unlikely to be improved and could even be damaged by hosting the games. People will still flock to either city whether they host the games or not.

A legacy of half-used and abandoned expensive Olympic venues litters the landscape of host cities. The more positive legacies, such as new roads and improved airports, could have been provided for less money, with greater transparency and more public input.

Hosting the Olympics is a distraction from achieving a fairer, more just and efficient city.

John Rennie Short is professor at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Policy. This commentary first appeared in The Conversation. Read the original commentary here.

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